This short article challenges the conventional wisdom that stakeholder thinking is the ethical solution to narrower stockholder thinking. Recalling the famous “open question argument” of G.E. Moore in the early twentieth century, the suggestion is that stakeholder thinking must also be understood as provisional since stakeholder satisfaction is not the same as moral responsibility. What is needed is more comprehensive moral thought in business ethics
Even among the most popular, normative business ethics textbooks today, there prevails a significant...
Company law requires boardroom decision making to be parochial but boardrooms are pluralist by natur...
It is difficult to imagine an area of study that has greater importance to society or greater releva...
The field of business ethics is trapped between two competing and flawed conceptions of corporate re...
Referring to the difference between Stakeholder Theory and Shareholder Theory, the ethical direction...
Is it legitimate for a business to concentrate on profits under respect for the law and ethical cust...
Two theories dominate business ethics – shareholder and stakeholder. By the former, shareholders hir...
The article argues that the goal of business is to increase profit, but it also recognizes that prop...
Ethical issues and problems in business are receiving increasing attention, both in terms of critici...
The issue at stake in the article is corporate social responsibility. There are two rival theories r...
This paper explores the relationship between two major concepts in business ethics - stakeholder the...
In this article the author attempts to show that in contemporary business ethics discourse the indiv...
As businesses emerge as some of the most powerful institutions in the world, business ethics have ne...
The concept of a stakeholder is one of the more prominent contributions of recent business ethics. S...
Company law requires boardroom decision making to be parochial but boardrooms are pluralist by natur...
Even among the most popular, normative business ethics textbooks today, there prevails a significant...
Company law requires boardroom decision making to be parochial but boardrooms are pluralist by natur...
It is difficult to imagine an area of study that has greater importance to society or greater releva...
The field of business ethics is trapped between two competing and flawed conceptions of corporate re...
Referring to the difference between Stakeholder Theory and Shareholder Theory, the ethical direction...
Is it legitimate for a business to concentrate on profits under respect for the law and ethical cust...
Two theories dominate business ethics – shareholder and stakeholder. By the former, shareholders hir...
The article argues that the goal of business is to increase profit, but it also recognizes that prop...
Ethical issues and problems in business are receiving increasing attention, both in terms of critici...
The issue at stake in the article is corporate social responsibility. There are two rival theories r...
This paper explores the relationship between two major concepts in business ethics - stakeholder the...
In this article the author attempts to show that in contemporary business ethics discourse the indiv...
As businesses emerge as some of the most powerful institutions in the world, business ethics have ne...
The concept of a stakeholder is one of the more prominent contributions of recent business ethics. S...
Company law requires boardroom decision making to be parochial but boardrooms are pluralist by natur...
Even among the most popular, normative business ethics textbooks today, there prevails a significant...
Company law requires boardroom decision making to be parochial but boardrooms are pluralist by natur...
It is difficult to imagine an area of study that has greater importance to society or greater releva...